Nothing. Bills which fail simply stop. The content of a failed bill may be re-introduced at a later date in a different bill, but once a specific bill has been voted down, it cannot then be re-introduced later.
It dies
The Black Mamba aka his ex and the mother of his daughter.
For a bill to become law it must be passed by both houses of Congress, so when the Senate passes a bill, the same bill must also go to the House of Representatives, or if the House has passed a similar bill, the two bills must be reconciled by a joint committee to produce a single bill that both houses can pass. Then when both houses have passed the same bill, the bill goes to the President for his signature. The President may or may not sign the bill, and if he doesn't, Congress can over-ride the veto if they have enough votes. Otherwise the bill dies.
The health care bill was voted down pretty much party lines. ONLY Democratic Senators and the one independent (and Lieberman (the Independent Democratic) voted for the bill and even some of them realized how bad this was for America and voted against the plan. Included in this plan are give aways that include $7 billion for gym sets, giveaways to students and $400 billion in cuts to the current public option that over 40% are currently on. It also keeps these same Congresspeople from having to have the same health care we will be forced to endure.
In Britain, a proposed bill does not become law if it is voted down in the House of Parliament. A bill that fails to acquire from Members of Parliament enough votes is unlikely to be put on the Statute Books and become law.
If the bill is to be made into act, both the houses must accept it by 2 /3rds of the members. If either of the house (either Upper House, or Lower ) don't accept it, it will not be considered.
Refused to leave, remaining on the Capitol steps until they were evicted by force
To make it simple, a law begins as a bill, introduced by a member of one of the two houses of Congress. After discussion and possible amendments are proposed and voted up or down, the body votes on the amended bill. If it passes, it is sent to the other house and voted on. If it passes both houses, it is sent to the President. If he signs it or ignores it for ten days, it becomes a law. If he vetoes it, it goes back to the house where it first passed and if they pass it again with a 2/3 majority, it is sent to the other house. If they also pass it again with a 2/3 majority, it becomes law without the President's approval.
First of all there is a bill and someone in the state parliament house wants to make it a law. So the bill gets introduced in the Legislative Assembly then it gets debated in the Legislative Assembly and if the bill gets agreed it goes all the way down to the Legislative Council and then it's the same thing the bill gets introduced in the Legislative Council and the it gets debated in the legislative Council and if it is agreed the bill is approved and then it is a law.
The dissolution Act was introduced to the Australian public as a referendum question as a reaction to the building anti communist anti Soviet rhetoric coming out of the USA. This question was put to the people of Australia in 1951. But was voted down by the people and so the act was never passed or enacted.
Neither one comes before the other. The two are opposites of one another. A "true bill" is a valid indictment of a defendant voted on and handed down by a Grand Jury. A "no true bill" is exactly the opposite. The GJ heard the presentment and declined to indict, therefore making its finding of "no true bill" of indictment.